inclusionarily

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From inclusionary +‎ -ly.

Adverb[edit]

inclusionarily (comparative more inclusionarily, superlative most inclusionarily)

  1. In an inclusionary manner.
    • 1981, Inclusionary Housing: A Technique for Providing Low- and Moderate-Income Housing:
      In fact, a 1977 decision of the U.S. Supreme Court restricted the duty of local government to implement inclusionary programs by ruling that absent proof that a city had purposefully discriminated against racial minorities in the past, no duty exists to zone inclusionarily to accommodate people traditionally excluded []
    • 1985, Dwight H. Merriam, David J. Brower, Philip D. Tegeler, editors, Inclusionary Zoning Moves Downtown, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Ill.: Planners Press, American Planning Association, →ISBN, page 4:
      It is only when we begin to act inclusionarily that our cities will have a chance to grow decently and equitably.
    • 1995, Mehran Kamrava, “Political culture and a new definition of the Third World”, in Third World Quarterly: Journal of Emerging Areas, volume 16, page 699:
      No matter how captivating a leader’s charisma, or how emotionally manipulative his ideology, or inclusionarily effective his populist institutions, he can still not mobilise popular support and emotional loyalty indefinitely.
    • 1997, Creel Froman, Language and Power: Books VIII and IX, Humanities Press, →ISBN, pages 7 and 117:
      Punishment, for example, is important, but “beatings,” or “excessive abuse,” or incest, or (some) other “particular” actions are to be seen as bad “variations,” whereas families as structures of ageism and sexism inclusionarily, and classism and racism exclusionarily, and which construct relations among members in terms of dominance/subordination and in which male and adult power are a continuous structural feature, are seen as what family relations are and are not themselves “abusive” (what are, in power’s language, the criterial and institutional bases realized/particularized as “family values”). [] Capitalism, for example, is called good even though it is explicitly a structure of class dominance/exploitation/oppression (which also entails racism/sexism/ageism/speciesism); the family is said to be good even though it is inclusionarily sexist and ageist, and exclusionarily racist and classist); etc.
    • 2013, Florian Walter, Sieglinde Rosenberger, Aleksandra Ptaszynska, “Challenging the boundaries of democratic inclusion? Young people's attitudes about the distribution of voting rights”, in Citizenship Studies, volume 17, pages 464–478:
      Furthermore, the study reveals that, in trying to explain the formation of juvenile attitudes about boundary issues, institutions are relevant when related to the conjunctive experiences manifested in the group-specific habitus: while young immigrants argue more inclusionarily than natives in terms of community-related preconditions, especially as far as the roles of language and citizenship are concerned, students argue more exclusionarily than apprentices when it comes to competence-related preconditions, especially civic education.
    • 2022, Bindu Puri, The Ambedkar–Gandhi Debate: On Identity, Community and Justice, Springer Science+Business Media, →ISBN, page 31:
      This followed from his belief that the human being was not inclusionarily transcendent to the rest of creation.

Antonyms[edit]